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80 years old last month. Still has original pipe organ. One of only two left in Detroit, the other at the restored Fox Theater 4$ a show With pipe organ at the beginning and Intermission. When was the last time you went to a movie with an Intermission. There currently restoring the japanese artwork inside that was covered up during World War II. In a bad part of town but still packs em in. Real butter on the popcorn too! Lol Tags:1928-2008Added: 5th March 2008Views: 1163Rating:Posted By:Marty6697

Before there were cell phones and super highways, drive-up or drive through, SUVs, DVDs, or MP-3s, before there was politically correct, and children as "friends;" before broad band, e-mail, and chat rooms; mini-malls, mega-stores; downsizing, upgrading, or out-sourcing; fast food or fast lane; walk-in's or take-out's; long before the next ten miles didn't seem to be a photocopy of the last ten miles, there was
The Real America
Photos
The Library of Congress
Documenting America
Music
the moment that could not last
Mark Isham
the old house
J.A.C. Redford
our town
Aaron Copeland
conceived and produced by
Dale Caruso Tags:1940sAmericaNostalgiaSmalltownruralAdded: 25th September 2008Views: 2080Rating:Posted By:dalecaruso

This is the theatrical trailer from the Robert Redford film 'The Great Waldo Pepper' (1975). This flick about barnstorming aviators was a box office disappointment for Redford after the huge successes of both 'The Sting' and 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.' Critic Leonard Maltin liked the movie, but said it 'wavers uncomfortably between slapstick and drama.' Tags:RobertRedfordGreatWaldoPepperAdded: 21st May 2009Views: 1732Rating:Posted By:Lava1964

In a scene immortalized by Hollywood in the 1969 film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (played by Paul Newman and Robert Redford), the two outlaws run into a hail of bullets after being cornered by Bolivian troops sometime around 1908. There have always been doubters as to the truth of the twosome's supposed violent end. No solid proof of such a shootout has ever been obtained. Instead, Cassidy is said to have fled to France where he had surgery on his face before sneaking back into the U.S. Furthermore, according to the same account, he lived out his final days quietly and anonymously in Washington State – and wrote an autobiography which he disguised as a biography.
In 2011, American rare book expert Brent Ashworth and author Larry Pointer obtained a 200-page manuscript from 1934 called Bandit Invincible: The Story of Butch Cassidy written by a William T. Phillips which they claim was actually written by Cassidy. They claim the book is Cassidy’s own story of his life as an outlaw.
It describes how after surviving the shootout in Bolivia he went to Paris and had his face altered then went back to the U.S. and reunited with an old girlfriend, Gertrude Livesay.
The authors say they married in Michigan in 1908 and moved to Spokane in Washington state in 1911. He apparently died in 1937, aged 71. One of Cassidy's 12 siblings claimed she saw Butch alive and well in 1924.
Tags:ButchCassisdydeathsurvivalAdded: 3rd January 2014Views: 1020Rating:Posted By:Lava1964